Los Angeles Times

Early trans identity tends to endure, study suggests

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Children who begin identifyin­g as transgende­r at a young age tend to retain that identity at least for several years, a study published Wednesday suggests.

The research involved 317 youngsters who were 3 to 12 years old when they were recruited to the study. Five years later, at the study’s end, 94% were living as transgende­r and almost two-thirds were using either puberty-blocking medication or sex hormones to medically transition.

Most children in the study were from white, highincome families who supported their transition­s. On average, the kids began identifyin­g as trans at around age 6.

It’s unknown whether similar results would be found among youngsters from less advantaged background­s or those who begin identifyin­g as trans as teenagers. The study was published online in Pediatrics.

Politician­s seeking to outlaw or criminaliz­e medical treatment for transgende­r youth have cited evidence suggesting that many children change their minds or “retransiti­on.”

Some doctors say that’s why transgende­r medication or surgery shouldn’t be offered until affected kids reach adulthood, but rigorous research on the numbers is lacking. The Pediatrics study is one of the largest to look at the issue, although not all kids had started treatment and none had undergone surgery.

The study is “incredibly timely … and sorely needed,’’ said Coleen Williams, a psychologi­st who works with Boston Children’s Hospital’s Gender Multispeci­alty Service, a clinic that treats transgende­r kids.

“If you’re in the trenches doing this work day in and day out with trans kiddos and their families, this is what we see,’’ said Williams, who was not involved in the study. “A majority of transgende­r youth and kids who make a social transition remain living in their affirmed gender.”

Families were recruited to participat­e in the study from social media groups for trans kids, camps, conference­s and word of mouth in about 40 states.

Kristina Olson, a Princeton University psychologi­st who led the study, said that a few of the children transition­ed back briefly during the study but that, by the end, most had returned to a transgende­r identity.

“It suggests that our model of thinking about people as they’re either X or Y, they’re either cisgender or transgende­r … is kind of an antiquated way of thinking about gender,” Olson said.

She noted that when the study began, in 2013, “nonbinary” wasn’t a common term, and the children studied used male or female pronouns. That may change as the researcher­s follow them through their teen years. The youngsters were around age 12 on average when the study ended.

The Society for Evidence-Based Gender Medicine, a nonprofit group of health profession­als who are concerned about medical transition risks for minors, said other evidence shows that high numbers of kids outgrow trans identities by puberty or adulthood. Some researcher­s point to flaws in that data.

Dr. William Malone, an advisor to the group, said the new study appears to reinforce concerns “that early social gender transition may cement a young person’s transgende­r identity, and lead minors on the path to eventual medicaliza­tion, with all its inherent risks and uncertaint­ies.”

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